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Johann Wolfgang Niklaus The Anthropology of the Theatre and the Reconstruction
of Mediaeval Liturgical Drama
The author describes the manner in
which the activity of the Schola of the Węgajty Theatre, focused on the
reconstruction and presentation of mediaeval liturgical drama,
refers to the anthropology of the theatre. The text is an
introduction to a series of studies published in this issue, dealing
with the quest conducted by the artists of the Schola in cooperation
with humanists, as well as the purely artistic,
historical-scientific, theological, anthropological and
cultural-studies research carried out for the more than the past ten
years. Upon the basis of the example of an expedition to Castelsardo
in Sardinia, a description of Holy Week processions, the so-called sacre
rappresentazioni – depictions
of the saints, and a meeting with the Fraternity of the Holy Cross,
the author demonstrated the essential rank of the anthropological
approach, against the backdrop of historical studies, together with
the creative tasks of the company, i. e. a reconstruction of Ludus
Passionis, the oldest Passion play in Latin
Europe. This monumental
liturgical drama is contained within a thirteenth- century
manuscript known as Carmina Burana, from the Benedictine monastery in Kaufbeuern and kept in the National
Library in
Munich
. What could be the outcome of the described experiences, apart from
the purely cognitive results, obvious for the activity of the
company? Meetings with such persons as members of the fraternity
from Castelsardo and other representatives of then world of living
tradition open up a door to the world of the Holy Game (Sacer Ludus) envisaged by Gerardus van der Leeuw, which in its
pure and earnest form is what our contemporary life lacks. It is the
author’s sincere hope that the proposed selection of texts and
material will describe the fashion in which a theatrical company may
build, enhance and realise its tasks by basing itself on instruments
moulded by the anthropology of the theatre.
Błażej Matusiak OP A Commentary to The Testimony of Egeria
A brief theological reflection serves
as an introduction to an ancient description of Paschal liturgy in
Jerusalem
. There are two extant traces of the Jerusalem Holy Week liturgy:
the catechesis of Bishop Cyril and the testimony of Egeria who went
on a pilgrimage from Gaul to the
Holy Land
. The Holy Week in
Jerusalem
was devoted to tracing the sites of the Passion. ”The road” is a
key concept in Christianity. The earthly life of Christ is composed
of His exodus and a return from this world to His father. The life
of Christians is an emulation of Christ and a path leading to the
Home of the Father, while a pilgrimage and a procession are copies
of that road, The very essence of Easter is such a recollection of
the path traversed by Jesus, which offers participation in all that
which is remembered, The Passover of Christ is not a part of the
past but an eternal event, and the role of liturgy, including
liturgical drama, is to guide towards eternity. This is probably the
reason why the Egeria text continuously mentions infinite matters:
luminescence, the glimmer of candles, and the voices of singers. If
according to Nikolaus Harnoncourt it is worth performing only that
sort of music, which proves alive today, then a return to the
liturgical drama of yore even more so cannot denote a departure into
the past.
Liturgical
Drama Today. Doubts, Hopes, Visions. A Register of a Discussion Held in a Catholic Intelligentsia Club
The titular discussion was attended
by theatre experts, theologians, clergymen, musicologists and
anthropologists. Theoreticians and practicians. The friends and
lovers of Schola of the Węgajty Theatre. The multi-motif debate
concerned assorted aspects of the Schola’s activity. Much was said
about the importance of the quest conducted by the Schola, aimed at
a reanimation of liturgical drama in
Poland
and its introduction into a living theatrical-religious circuit. The
participants of the discussion showed the distinctness of the
undertakings pursued by Wolfgang Niklaus and his company against the
backdrop of the theatrical avant-garde associated with Kantor and
Grotowski. The topic of the debates included the difficult and
highly ambivalent revalorisation of tradition, indicating the
accompanying threats (a tendency towards turning the theatre into a
museum), but also the positive side of such ventures (a living,
currently created and constructed tradition). The speakers
demonstrated the obstacles which hamper the staging of liturgical
drama, connected with an incessant balancing between the sacral and
the secular. The great merit of the discussion was its extremely
personal nature. It must be stressed that in many cases erudite
theoretical-historical statements or those concerning musical
performances, were accompanied by totally private confessions made
by musicians collaborating with the Schola or the participants of
the dramas presented by this theatrical company. Their views not
only stimulated the discussion, but also proved irrefutably that
despite certain differences in the assessment of the Węgajty
Theatre, its members perceive the encounter with liturgical drama as
an essential experience.
Julian Lewański The Artistic Aspects of Dramatised Liturgy
The lecture considers the poetic of
the mediaeval liturgical drama. By resorting to the liturgical
recommendations contained in Polish Church texts from the fifteenth
and sixteenth century, the author reconstructed in detail the course
of the dramatised rituals of the Holy Week (Palm Sunday, Elevatio Crucis, Descensio ad
infernos, Visitatio Sepulchri), and analysed
the measures of theatrical expression applied therein (i. a. a
concentration of contents, simultaneity, the effect of strong
contrasts and vivid oppositions, the ”blurred” personality of
some of the dramatis personae). The rituals
in question were an act of piety and, at the same time, a
spectacular drama featured on a stage without footlights since the
whole town could become a theatre. The author claims that if we wish
to understand properly the artistic merits of liturgical drama, we
must become familiar with entirely new aesthetic rules.
Magdalena
Mijalska An Introduction to Ludus Danielis. A Guide to Several Ranges of the Liturgical Theatre
The author began her presentation of
the structure of the liturgical drama entitled Ludus Danielis – a sui generis ”spectator’s guide” – by examining the text of the manuscript
from Beauvais. She went on to consider the dynamic of the reality
created in the church interior by the theatrical word and gesture.
In doing so, she indicated such features as the vanishing contrast
between the actors and the spectators, the reduced significance of
the plot and the characters, the increased rank of the structure as
well as the deceleration of the rate of events. In this sort of
theatre, the centre of gravity is transferred from the plot to
”contemplative activity”, the celebration of the
”happening”, and the dynamic of relations between man and God.
The author also studied from a meta-theatrical vantage point the
question of the part and the actor, taking this opportunity to cite
the theatrical reflections of Juliusz Osterwa (his plans of
transforming the Reduta Theatre into a Brotherhood of St. Genesius).
Marcel Pérès From
Moravia
to
Toledo
Marcel Pérès, one of the
greatest singers, musicologists and researcher on the field of
traditions of sacred chant presents the tradition of mozarabic chant
of the brotherhood Andavìas in
Spain
. To show the complexity of this topic, he draws the wide context of
his meeting with Andavìas tradition: the way that led him and
his friend of Festival in Jarosław, during over ten years of
tracing and studying different kinds of chant traditions. He shows
links between the practical use and contemporary existence of the
treatise of Hieronymus de Moravia, Greek Byzantynian chant, Corsican
tradition of polyphony and the history of appearance and development
of the mozarabic chant in
Spain
. He is pointing differences and similarities between the living
tradition and showing their actual condition, meaning and importance
for the revival of the West Christian sacred chant. The article is
based on Mercel Pérès’ speech from the International
Festival of Early Music “The Song of Our Roots” in Jarosław in
2006.
Michał Siciarek On the Performance of Bernardine Pious Songs at the
Turn of the Fifteenth Century
Introductory data are to recollect
the history of the appearance of the Bernardines in Polish lands –
the foundations of the particular monasteries, and the origin of the
Bernardine tertiary nuns and secular fraternities. The author went
on to examine briefly the Franciscan or Bonaventuran model of
Passion devotion, especially the forms, motifs and prayer schemes
particularly popular during the Late Middle Ages among the
Franciscans. General comments on piety are followed by a
Polish-language Franciscan repertoire: catechism songs, chaplets,
the hours and para-theatrical forms – Nativity and Easter Passion
plays. This repertoire possessed its own performance milieu – the
subsequent fragment outlines views concerning the performance of
songs by the Bernardine monks and nuns or secular brotherhoods. Next
the author discussed four monuments preserved in Bernardine sources
– two songs by Władysław of Gielniów: Jezusa Judasz przedał and the chaplet Kto chce Pannie Maryi służyć, followed by examples preserved in a manuscript of Psalterium Beatissimae ac Gloriosissimae Virginis
Mariae from Lwów and, finally, Coronula sive Koronka written by Brother Seweryn from Goblin. The text ends by briefly
mentioning the impact exerted by the Council of Trent and the
post-Council Catholic reform upon the development of Franciscan folk
piety, achieved by, i. e. regulating the contents of prayer books
and the status of the tertiary nuns and piety fraternities.
Iosif Vivilakis An Introduction to Byzantine Drama
This lecture starts with a reference
to the Byzantine dramatic tradition. The
Byzantium
, and in particular the church, did not encourage the growth of
religious theatre and this is mainly due to theological reasons.
During the 15th century, a few years before the end of the
Byzantine Empire
, the religious theatre of the catholics was characterized as
“sect” and “innovation”. They are terms which ostensibly
show a theatrophobia, but which are comprehended in the context of
the liturgical art of the church and by the study of another view of
the world where the catalytic presence of the holy dominates. It is
distinctive that only one Byzantine manuscript that emanates from
Cyprus
gives elements for a theatrical performance of the Passion of the
Christ. Nevertheless, some of the researchers tried to apply the
conclusions for the religious theatre of the catholic west in the
Byzantine culture, attributing to phenomena irrelevant to the stage,
the terms “theatre” and “drama”. This study examines the
role of theatre in the
Byzantium
(through the comparison of theatrical experience between west and
east) and it negotiates texts and practices that can be considered
as belonging to the religious drama, with the literal importance of
term: a text with instructions, which is intended to be presented on
a stage in front of a crowd.
Svetlana Butskaya The Tradition of the Old Believers
An account of the most important
aspects of on-the-spot work conducted in the
village
of
Kunicha
. The objective of the research was a complex study of the
traditional culture of the Old Rite community living in
Moldova
. The seventeenth-century schism in the Russian Orthodox Church,
which was the outcome of the reforms introduced by Tsar Alexey I and
Patriarch Nikon remains one of the most dramatic pages in Russian
history. The raskoniki (raskol –
schism), persecuted by the state and the official Church, tried to
preserve not only their faith but also their very lives. Entire
settlements, villages and families took Church books, manuscripts
and icons along with them while seeking refuge in dense forests
along the borders of Russia and even abroad. Many found safety in
the lands of pre-partition Commonwealth. Today, Old Believer
settlements may be encountered all over the world – in Baltic
countries,
Romania
,
Moldova
,
Turkey
, the
USA
and
Canada
. The earliest Old Believer settlements in
Moldavia
(today:
Moldova
) were founded in the first half of the eighteenth century. Up to
this day, Old Believer Russian villages coexist with those of an
entirely different cultural tradition and tongue. Assimilation,
however, never took place: the Old Believers vigilantly protect the
spiritual message of their ancestors. The Moldavian environment
treats the Russians with respect, and accepts the complexity of
their nature – enclosure within their tradition and an
unwillingness to establish closer contacts; both attitudes are
associated with a specific historical plight. During the early 1970s
the prosperous and large
village
of
Kunicha
was inhabited by more than 4 000 Old Believers. Although the young
people tend to leave for the cities, generally speaking the bond
with the land of the fathers remains undisturbed, as evidenced by
the gatherings of whole families for assorted important holidays,
especially Christmas and Easter. The necessity to adapt to a
constantly changing social situation is one of the many aspects of
the daily life of the village. Openness to transformations is a
feature only of economic activity. At the same time, the life of the
villagers is still marked by Church festivities and rituals, and the
community functions predominantly in a sacral time, closely
subjected to the daily and yearly liturgical cycle of Church
services. Throughout the whole liturgical year Kunicha resounds with
a one-voice znamienniy chant, recorded in a special neumatic notation, similar to the medieval
tradition of
Western Europe
. The Old Believers did not accept the record introduced by
Patriarch Nikon – with square notes and polyphony – and continue
singing according to the old books. Today, the inhabitants of
Kunicha are not forced to flee their foes. The Eastern rite,
Ukrainian part of the village respects neighbours who cultivate
different customs. Young people from the two parts of the village
attend the same school, and from early childhood are taught
deference and good will towards both creeds. Peaceful Kunicha
carefully distinguishes between the two worlds – it does not
impose its lifestyle upon the outsiders but it also does not allow
itself to succumb to external impact.
Rafał Lewandowski The Epiphanies of Bacchus
Bacchus-Dionysus, seen by A. Solomos
in the mosaic of the church in Dafni, is depicted as an allegorical
guide to the “hidden theatre”. The essay by R. Lewandowski
presents the scientific and poetic work by the author of Saint Bacchus on unknown epochs in the Greek theatre from 300 BC to
1600 AD. In contrast to the West, which separates antiquity from the
modern era, the East cultivates the
continuum and development of the theatre. The Greek-Christian drama
acts as a bridge linking the two epochs.
Alexis Solomos This Scene Takes Place in Heaven
A summary of a chapter from A.
Solomos’ book Saint Bacchus, outlining the origin and history of Christian drama
as the outcome of the psalm-the Christian dithyramb. Next we have
the Song of Songs conceived as the prototype of the opera and psalms intended for choral
performance; the introduction of songs into the liturgy by the
heretics and the adaptation of Christian psalms to the principles of
ancient Greek music; the protest expressed by Christians against
psalms, perceived as earthly pleasure as well as their ultimate
acceptance by the orthodox Christians and the establishment of the
custom of singing poetic songs at the time of the Fathers of the
Church. From the fifth century on, Syrian communities witnessed the
flourishing of the art of the hymnographers, the most distinguished
being Roman Melodos. Hymns and kontakions assumed a dramatic
character although not openly (since the theatre was much criticised).
Such dramatic features as the absence of the narration and
”theatrical” dialogue, a person in place of an animal character
(the serpent with Adam and Eve), and scenes described by the
hymnographers reflect Church customs; in the introduction of the
forces of darkness (the Devil, Hades, Thanatos) words do not possess
the merits of salvation. The hymns display a formal similarity to
the secular theatre. The author proposed a hypothesis about the
theatrical staging of hymns; in his opinion, The Descent to Hell, enacted up to this day in
Greece
, is a relic of this practice.
Michaelis Adamis The Officium of the Three Godly Youths in a Fiery
Furnace
M. Adamis portrayed the Officium of the Furnace, i. e. a liturgical depiction of the story of the Three Youths in a
Fiery Furnace, once staged in the main churches of Constantinople
and
Thessaloniki
as well as other metropolitan churches in
Byzantium
. The author characterised the context of the performance, namely,
the sung version of the Divine Service. He also cited information
contained in manuscripts and described the arrangement of parts of
the officium and its dramatic course. M. Adamis then wrote about the
place held by the officium in question in the liturgical calendar,
the means of its execution, the type of songs (alternate) and motion
(dance) and probable props (furnace, icon). The article mentions the
doubts harboured by members of the Church hierarchy about this
particular form of the cult as well as the justifications of its
defence. Finally, the author outlined the course of his own work on
the reconstruction of this form, which had not survived in live
tradition. The reader is offered additional information about the
tradition of performing the Officium of the Furnace in
Rus’.
Rafał Lewandowski The Apocryphal Nature of the Painting: Icons of St.
Constantine and St. Helen in Anastenaria
Greek refugees from Bulgaria, who
during the 1920s settled down in Greek Macedonia, brought over the
ancient cult of the Anastenaria, a pagan ritual which merged the
Christian holiday of St. Constantine and his mother, Helen. The
presented text contains a description of the basic elements of the
holiday in question, with special attention paid to the icon of the
Anastenarides, traditionally described as the superior component of
the cult. In this case, the iconic aspect was discussed in reference
to studies dealing with the apocrypha, conducted conducted by Prof.
Wiesław Juszczak, as well as an account about similar objects in
antiquity, The Apocryphal Nature of the Painting is an attempt at a new look at the icon, with the
ultimate analysis avoiding solutions based on the heretic character
of the likeness.
Gerardus van der Leeuw The Holy in Art. Reminiscences
The presented fragments come from the
second chapter of Sacred and
Profane Beauty. The Holy in Art, a book
by the acclaimed Dutch phenomenologist. The whole text has been
already published in ”Konteksty” more than ten years ago but
owing to the importance of van der Leuuw’s reflections for the
activity of the Schola of the Węgajty Theatre we have decided to
reprint it again, this time in an abbreviated version. In the cited
fragments the author followed closely the differences, similarities,
and tension between art and religion. In doing so, he portrayed the
sacral hinterland of drama and the European theatre. His highly
erudite remarks indicate a number of essential religious and
symbolic contexts for understanding the role and function of
liturgical drama.
Marcel Pérès Anthropological Meanings of the Space of Liturgy. A
Conversation Held by Rev. Claude Barthe with Marcel Pérès
The topics of this conversation
encompass liturgical music, both present-day and past, whose
recreation and performance are the domain of Marcel Pérès;
other motifs include the musical culture ”amnesia” of the
contemporary Catholic Church, failed attempts at reform (the reforms
proposed by Pius X and the Solesmes movement, Vaticanum II), the
quest for traditional sacral space and the liturgical revival.
Jacek Pawlik Quests
The search conducted by the Schola of
the Węgajty Theatre has two objectives; it involves, on the one
hand, the reconstruction of mediaeval manuscripts and, on the other
hand, the staging of religious dramas. The author drew parallels
between the research carried out by the Schola and the work
performed by P. Nawrot, relating to the reconstruction of Baroque
manuscripts from Bolivia; subsequently, he went on to compare
African ritual drama and the Indian ramlila with the spectacles
featured by the Schola.
Bernardin Škunca, OFM Traditional
Folk Holy Week Passion Processions on the
Island
of
Hvar
The extraordinary Passion heritage on
the
island
of
Hvar
is regarded as one of the phenomena of Christianity. The author
focused on three Passion processions held in the course of the Holy
Week, which have survived uninterruptedly from the Middle Ages and
remain part of live tradition. Having described the contexts and
course of the Theophoric Evening Procession on Good Friday, the
”Following the Cross” procession and the procession to the
“Lord’s Sepulchre”, he outlined the historical background,
emphasising the significance of the local brotherhoods and
confraternities in the transmission of folk religious tradition. The
article then considers the concurrence of the contents and form of
this tradition with Church liturgy, and concludes about the
unquestionable merits of this spiritual and cultural legacy not as a
mere historical fact but as a manner of cultivating spiritual life
by the congregation itself.
Katarzyna Jackowska In Search for the „Total Harmony”
In northern-west coast of
Sardegna
, in a small town called Castelsardo, there exist a religious
brotherhood of medieval origins – Confraternita Oratorio di Santa
Croce di Castelsardo. Among many similar groups of profane people
dedicating their activity to religious purpose, this one is quite
special – because of their tradition of chant and rituals. The
culmination of their activity is a Holy Week, fulfilled with chant
and processions, with a great procession of Lunissanti. This
procession, absolutely unique among other European rituals, takes
place on Monday, after the Palm Sunday, and lasts from early morning
till late night. The article focuses on few features of
brotherhood’s activity and their rituals: dramatic dimension and
social context of feasts, and necessarity and possibilities created
by real – both physical and spiritual participation – that can
help one to find something called by members of the brotherhood
“the total harmony”.
Krzysztof Maria Byrski Indian Temple Theatre and Liturgical Drama
The invocation, which preceded my
presentation in its last line, calls theatre a sacrifice. What does
that mean? Hindus basically have a monistic vision of reality. The
entire universe emerged from the One that was at the beginning of
time. The most important and characteristic feature of our universe
is perception. This is why it is termed – perceptive reality. In
order to create such reality the One had to become a perceiving
subject and at the same time a perceivable object. It just had to
die as the One and had to become many, just for the sake of joy of
uniting again. This union can be a joyful experience because the one
divides itself also into one who desires and into another one who is
desired. While watching this loveable sacrifice for the eyes that
theatrical performance is, we emotionally identify ourselves with
the process of such unification, follow it and experience the joy of
merger into One. The question now has to be answered why can it
happen in theatre and why it is so difficult to experience in our
daily life? The answer is an emotional distance, which we do not
have in our normal life, in which we shun unpleasant experiences and
seek only pleasant ones. In theatre we enjoy both of them equally.
Why? Because the stage reality is not the proper reality of a hero
of a play. It is also not the proper reality of an actor or a
spectator. Therefore it is a non-particular reality, which evokes
non-particular emotional responses. The Kudiyattam theatre of Kerala
by its highly conventionalised form makes it even more striking and
by associating it with temple ritual turns theatre into ritual as
well.
Anna Łopatowska The Search for Gesture. My Encounters with the Schola
of the Węgajty Theatre Company
My encounter with the Węgajty Schola.
The first presentation of the kudijattam theatre in
Gdańsk
, initial conversations about eventual cooperation with Wolfgang
Niklaus and his company. Some basic information about the kudijattam
temple theatre from Kerala. Several remarks about the possible
application of original gestures in liturgical drama upon the basis
of my acting and theatrical experiences as well as those connected
with studies on kudijattam. Select information about the manner in which my
imagination created gestures for the needs of the performers from
the Schola of the Węgajty Theatre.
Monika Paśnik-Petryczenko The Schola of the Węgajty Theatre
The Schola of the Węgajty Theatre,
an international company of artists active since 1994, deals with
the reconstruction of medieval liturgical drama, research into the
tradition of sacral songs and tracing the traditional cultures of
assorted regions of
Poland
and
Europe
. The author discusses the prime programme premises, repertoire,
history, work and composition of
the company.
Renata Rogozińska Nothing Stands in the Mandorla
Jan Berdyszak referred to the icon in
Reserved Places and Facies, two series from the 1970s. The first was based on the
motif of a flaming rhomb, characteristic especially for the Saviour in Majesty icon, while the second recalls the imprint of the face of Christ on
fabric, produced, according to tradition, in a mysterious, divine
manner. In both series Berdyszak resigned from a presentation of
figures for the sake of a shape indicating the (non) presence of
Christ or, to put it differently, an evocation of the places from
which God has vanished – an oval of a head without a face, and a
rhomb, frequently combined with a circle (mandorla) and a square.
The empty space delineated by Berdyszak by means of gaps, fissures
and openings becomes “space proper”, a place for contemplating
the invisible, an epiphanic space. The material elements of the
composition are reduced to a ”casing”, concealing that which
remains invisible to the eyes or, to use the name of another series
by the same artist, they produce a passe-partout
of sorts and, simultaneously, a
transition to an entity (passe-par-tout). This approach contradicts the profound humanism of
Eastern-rite painting, based on the dogma of the incarnation. The veraicon in
particular depicts humanity in a highly expressive and poignant
manner within the perspective of suffering and death. This is also
the reason why the fact that Jan Berdyszak applied “the true icon
of Christ”, or actually its damaged form, to demonstrate the
experiencing of God in a void and nothingness, so close to mysticism,
could be interpreted as a symptom of radical (provocative?)
iconoclasm. The character and message of both series is excellently
rendered in Paul Celan’s well-known Mandorla:
In der Mandel – was steht in der
Mandel?/ Das Nichts./
Es steht das Nichts in der Mandel./
Da steht es und steht1
Renata Rogozińska Towards the Icon
The icon has become a permanent
fixture of Western culture and occupies a prominent place within the
“museum of the imagination” of the average viewer. Encountered
in churches, both Catholic and Protestant, featured in museums and
innumerable art galleries, smuggled across borders, purchased at
prestigious art auctions and in street flea markets, created with
the preservation of ancient rules and models as well as counterfeit,
paraphrased and reproduced, it has gained an army of art lovers
across the world. The popularity of Russian Orthodox Church painting
has its repercussions also in contemporary art. The spectrum of
artistic attitudes and manners of depiction derived from the icon is
extensive and situated between two extremities: imitation and purely
mental inspiration, illegible in the formal shape of the artwork,
artwork, produced on the basis of avant-garde individualism. Artists
inspired by the icon include representatives of the most varied
currents and conventions. From Klimt and Moreau, the Russian
avant-garde, Matisse, Kandinsky, Modigliani, Andrzej Pronaszko,
Chwistek, and Hiller, to Mondrian, Berdyszak, Bednarczyk,
Damasiewicz, Sadley, Rothko, Tapies, Klein, Wiktor or Warhol, they
executed works of astonishing formal variety, frequently at first
glance totally unlike the original.
Zbigniew Władysław Solski An Unknown Staging of The Story of Glorious Resurrection of the Lord
The director proposed comments on his
own staging of the play by Mikołaj of Wilkowieck, shown at Easter
1983 by the State Puppet Theatre in
Wałbrzych
. A recollection of the socio-political context of the spectacle,
and a presentation of the sources for the conceptions and
inspiration of this stage vision. Z. W. Solski also indicated the
supplements of the basic text and the reasons for such an operation,
and went on to describe in detail one of the open-air performances.
The text is followed by three appendices: Message, Staging notes and A description of the spectacle, making it possible to bring the reader close to the
impact of this production in the historical conditions prevailing in
the People’s Republic of
Poland
.
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